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Art |
Article/Articles |
BGH |
Bundesgerichtshof (Federal Court of Justice) [Germany] |
CCQ |
Civil Code Rules (Quebec) |
cf |
confer (compare) |
CJEU |
Court of Justice of the European Union |
CJPTA |
The Court Jurisdiction and Proceedings Transfer Act (Canada) |
ECLI |
European Case Law Identifier |
ECtHR |
European Court of Human Rights |
ed |
editor/editors |
eg |
exempli gratia (for example) |
ELI |
European Law Institute |
etc |
et cetera |
EU |
European Union |
ff |
following |
GCCP |
Code of Civil procedure (Germany) |
HCCH |
Hague Conference on Private International Law |
ie |
id est (that is) |
n |
footnote (internal, ie, within the same chapter) |
no |
number/numbers |
obs |
Observations |
para |
paragraph/paragraphs |
SCC |
Supreme Court Canada |
Sec |
Section/Sections |
UK |
United Kingdom |
UN |
United Nations |
US / USA |
United States of America |
USD |
United States Dollar |
v |
Versus |
European Convention on State Immunity 1972.
Lugano Convention on jurisdiction and the enforcement of judgments in civil and commercial matters 1988.
Convention on Jurisdictional Immunities of States and Their Property 2004.
Hague Convention on Choice of Court Agreement 2005.
Regulation (EC) 593/2008 of 17 June 2008 of the European parliament and of the Council on the law applicable to contractual obligations (Rome I) (EU).
Regulation 1215/2012 of 12 December 2012 of the European Parliament and of the Council on jurisdiction and the recognition and enforcement of judgments in civil and commercial matters (recast) (EU).
Regulation 650/2012 of 4 July 2012 of the European Parliament and of the Council on jurisdiction, applicable law, recognition and enforcement of decisions and acceptance and enforcement of authentic instruments in matters of succession and on the creation of a European Certificate of Succession (EU).
Council Regulation implementing enhanced cooperation in the area of jurisdiction, applicable law and the recognition and enforcement of decisions in matters of matrimonial property regimes, 2016/1103 of 24 June 2016 (EU).
Council Regulation 2019/1111 of 25 June 2019 on jurisdiction, the recognition and enforcement of decisions in matrimonial matters and the matters of parental responsibility, and on international child abduction (recast) (EU).
Civil Code 1803 (Luxembourg).
Civil Code 1804 (France).
Code of Civil Procedure 1887 (Germany).
Code of Civil and Commercial Procedures (1968) (Egypt).
FED. R. CIV.P. 1938.
US Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act 1976.
UK State Immunity Act 1978.
Swiss Federal Act of Private International Law of 18 December 1987.
Civil Code 1991 (Quebec).
Code of Civil Procedure 1996 (Japan).
Venezuelan Act on Private International Law of 6 August 1998.
Code of Private International Law of 27 November 1998 (Tunisia).
Dominican Republic Private International Law Act of 5 December 2014.
Interpretation of the Supreme People’s Court on Applicability of the Civil Procedure Law of the People's Republic of China of 3rd May 2015.
Restatement (Fourth) of Foreign Relations Law 2018.
Practice Direction 6B Service Out of the Jurisdiction (UK) 2022.
Van Uden Maritime BV v Kommanditgesellschaft in Firma Deco-Line, Case C-391/95 (CJEU), Judgment 17 November 1988 [ECLI:EU:C:1998:543].
Al- Adsani v Government of Kuwait (ECtHR), Case 35763/97, Judgment of 21 November 2001.
Eric Gasser Gmbh v MISAT srl, Case C116/02 (CJEU), Judgment 9 December 2003 [ECLI:EU:C:2003:657].
Cudak v Lithuania, Case 15869/02 (ECtHR), Judgment 23 March 2010 para 66.
Sabeh El Leil v France, Case 34869/05 (ECtHR), Judgement 29 june 2011 para 54.
Germany v Italy; Greece intervening, Jurisdictional Immunities of the State (PICJ), Judgment 3 February 2012, [Reports 2012] 99.
A Mahamdia v People’s Democratic Republic of Algeria, Case C-154/11 (CJEU), Judgment 19 July 2012 [ECLI: ECLI:EU:C:2012:309].
Oleynikov v Russia, Case 36703/04
(ECtHR), Judgment 14 March 2012 para 66.
Hőszig Kft. v Alstom Power Thermal Services,
Case C-222/15 (CJEU), Judgment 7 July 2016 [ECLI:EU:C:2016:525] para 39.
Radunović v Montenegro (ECtHR), Case 45197/13, Judgment 25 October 2016 para 69.
Naït-Liman v Switzerland, Case 51357/07 (ECtHR) GC, Judgment 15 March 2018.
Saey Home & Garden NV/SA v Lusavouga-Máquinas e Acessórios Industriais SA, Case C-64/17 (CJEU), Judgment 8 March 2019 [ECLI: ECLI:EU:C:2018:173].
LG v Rina, Case C-641/18 (CJEU), Judgement 7 May 2020 [ECLI: ECLI:EU:C:2020:349].
LG v Rina, Case C-641/18 (CJEU), Judgment 7 May 2020 [ECLI:EU:C:2020:3], Opinion of A.G. M Szpunar) para 38.
Benkharbouche and Janah v UK, Case 19059/18 and 19725/18 (ECtHR), Judgment 5 April 2022.
British South Africa Co v Companhia de Mocambique, Case A.C. 602 (House of Lords, UK), Judgment 8 September 1893.
Hilton v Guyot, No 130, 34 (Supreme Court, US) [159 US 113 (1895)], Judgment 3 June 1895.
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Scheffel, Case Bull. Civ. I, no 452 (Cour de cassation, France), Judgment 30 October 1962.
Claim against the Empire of Iran Case, Case 45 ILR 57 (BVerfG, Germany), Judgment 30 April 1963.
Administration des chemins de fer du gouvernement iranien c/ Sté Levant Express Transport, Case 67-10.243 (Court of cassation, France), Judgment 25 February 1969.
M/S Bremen v Zapata Off-Shore Co., No. 71-322 (Supreme Court, US) [407 US 1 (1972)], Judgment 12 June 1972.
The Atlantic Star, Case Q.B. 364, 382 (Court of Appeal, England and Wales), Judgment 27 July 1972.
Shaffer v Heitner, No 75-1812 (Supreme Court, US) [ 433 US 186 (1977)] Judgment 24 June 1977.
Piper Aircraft Co. v Reyno, No 8048 (Supreme Court, US) [454 US 235 (1981)] Judgment 8 December 1981.
Playa Larga (Owners of Cargo Lately Laden on Board) v I Congreso del Partido (Owners), Case 1 AC 244 (House of Lords, UK), Judgment of 16 July 1981 [1981] UKHL J0716-2.
Helicopteros Nacionales de Colombia, S.A. v Hall, No 82-1127 (Supreme Court, US) [466 US 408 (1984)] Judgment 24 April 1984.
Spiliada Maritime Corpn v Cansulex Ltd, Case AC 460 (House of Lords, UK), Judgment 19 November 1986.
In Re Union Carbide Corp. Gas Plant Disaster, No 21-38 (Supreme Court, US) [634 F. Supp. 842 (1986)] Judgment 10 June 1986.
Asahi Metal Industry Co. v Superior Court of Cal., Solano Cty, No 85-693 (Supreme Court, US) [480 US 102 (1987)] Judgment 24 February 1987.
Omni Capital Int’l v Rudolf Wolff & Co., Ltd., No 86-740 (Supreme Court, US) [484 US 97 (1987)], Judgment 8 December 1987.
Burnham v Superior Court of California, County of Marin, No 89-44 (Supreme Court, US) [495 US 604 (1990)] Judgment 29 May 1990.
Morguard Investments Ltd. c. De Savoye, Case 21116 (Supreme Court, Canada), Judgment 20 December 1990.
Carnival Cruise Lines, Inc. v Shute, No. 89-1647 (Supreme Court, US) [499 US 585 (1991)] Judgment 17 April 1991.
Case XI ZR 206/90 (BGH), Judgment 2 July 1991.
Siderman de Blake and others v Argentina and others, No 85-5773 (US Court of Appeals, US) [965 F.2d 699 (9th Cir. 1992)] Judgment of 22 May 1992.
Government of Canada v Employment Appeals Tribunal and Burke, Case 95 ILR 467, Judgment 12 March 1992.
Saudi Arabia v Nelson, No 91-522 (Supreme Court, US) [507 US 349 (1993)] Judgment of 1993.
Al- Adsani v Government of Kuwait, (Court of Appeal, England and Wales), Judgment of 29 March 1996, [1996] 2 LRC 344
Case 61/2000 (Constitutional Court, Spain), Judgment 13 March 2000.
El-Hadad v United Arab Emirates, No 99-7220 (District of Columbia Circuit Court, US) [216 F.3d 29 (D.C. Cir. 2000)] Judgment of 16 June 2000.
Lubbe v Cape Plc, Case 1 W.L.R. 1545 (House of Lords, UK) Judgment 20 July 2000 [2000] UKHL J0720-4.
Fendi S.R.L v Condotti Shops, Inc., No. 3D99-2258 (District Court of Appeal of Florida, Third District) [754 So. 2d 755 (Fla. Dist. Ct. App. 2000)], Judgment 8 March 2000.
Société Eram Shipping Company Limited (Respondents) and others v Hong Kong and Shanghai Banking Corporation Limited (Appellants) (House of Lords, United Kingdom) [2003] UKHL 30, Judgment 30 of 12 June 2003.
Dame Soliman v École saoudienne de Paris et Royaume d'Arabie saoudite, Case 00-45.629 (Court of cassation, France), Judgment 20 June 2003.
Beals c. Saldanha, Case 2003 CSC 72 (Supreme Court, Canada), Judgment 18 December 2003.
Case no 02-17974 (Court of Cassation, France), Judgment 30 March 2004.
Monster Cable Products Inc v Audio Marketing Services, Case no 07-15.823 (Cour de cassation, France), Judgment 22 October 2008.
AK Investment CJSC v Kyrgyz Mobil Tel Ltd & Ors (Isle of Man), Case JCPC 2009/0064 (Supreme Court, UK), Judgment 10 March 2011 [201]1 UKPC 7.
Goodyear Dunlop Tires Operations, S.A. v Brown, No 10-76 (Supreme Court, US) [564 US 915 (2011)] Judgment 27 June 2011.
J. McIntyre Mach., Ltd. V Nicastro, No 09-1343 (Supreme Court, US) [564 US 873 (2011)], Judgment 27 June 2011.
Star Reefers Pool Inc. v JFC Group Co. Ltd, Case [2012] EWCA Civ 14 (Court of Appeal, England and Wales) Judgment 20 January 2012.
Case no 11-40101 (Cour de cassation, France), Judgment 29 February 2012.
Club Resorts Ltd. v Van Breda, Case 2012 SCC 17 (Supreme Court, Canada), Judgment 18 April 2012.
Case no VII ZR 25/12 (BGH, Germany), Judgment 5 September 2012.
Case no 36358, (Cour of Appeal, Luxembourg), Judgment 6 November 2013 (2014) Journal des tribunaux Luxembourg 81, with obs. P Kinsch.
Kazemi Estate v Islamic Republic of Iran, Case 35034, Judgment 10 October 2014, [SCC] 62.
Benkharbouche v Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs, Case 2015/0063 (Supreme Court, UK), Judgment 18 October 2017 [2017] UKSC 62.
États-Unis d’Amérique c. P.V.N, Case S.15.0051.N (Court of cassation, Belgium), Judgment of 4 March 2019 (2020) Journal des Tribunaux 595.
Ambassade du Ghana, Case 18-13.790 (Court of cassation, France), Judgment appeal of 27 November 2019.
ICE, Case 18-24.643 (Court of cassation, France), Judgment of appeal 1 July 2020.
Akehurst M, ‘Jurisdiction in International Law’ (1972-73) 46 British Yearbook of International Law 145.
Barceló III J J and Clermont K M, A Global Law of Jurisdiction and Judgments: Lessons from The Hague (Kluwer Law International, The Hague, London, New York 2002).
Batiffol H, ‘Observations sur les liens de la compétence judiciaire et de la compétence législative’, (1962) 9 Netherlands International Law Review, Special Issue: De Conflictu Legum, Essays Presented to RD Kollewijn and J Offerhaus, 55.
Brand R, ‘Access to
Justice Analysis on a Due Process Platform’ (2012) 112 Columbia Law Review Sidebar 76.
Briggs A, Agreements on Jurisdiction and Choice of Law (Oxford University Press 2008).
Carmody C, Iwasawa Y and Rhodes S (eds.), Trilateral Perspectives on International Legal Issues: Conflict and Coherence (ASIL Baltimore 2003).
Childress III D.E, ‘V° Jurisdiction, Limits under International Law’, Encyclopedia of Private International Law (Elgar 2017) 1055.
Corneloup S, ‘Les liens entre forum et ius : réflexion sur quelques tendances en droit international privé contemporain’, Mélanges en l’honneur de B. Ancel (Ipralex 2017) 461.
Cuniberti G, ‘The International Market for Contracts – The Most Attractive Contract Laws’ (2014) 34 Northwestern Journal of International Law & Business 455.
Dodge W.S and Dodson S, ‘Personal Jurisdiction and Aliens’, (2018) 116 Michigan Law Review, 1205.
Dodge W. S, Gardner M and Whytock C, ‘The Many State Doctrines of Forum Non Conveniens’ (2023) 72 Duke Law Journal, 1163-1256.
Dodson S, ‘Personal Jurisdiction in Comparative Context’ (2020) 68 The American Journal of Comparative Law, 701.
Fernandez Arroyo D, Compétence exclusive et compétence exorbitante dans les relations privées internationales (Collected Courses of the Hague Academy of International Law 323 2006) 23, 37.
Gardner M, ‘Retiring Forum Non Conveniens’ (2017) 92 New York University Law Review, 390.
Garnett R, ‘Should the Sovereign Immunity Be Abolished?’ (1999) 20 Australian Yearbook of International Law 175.
Hartley T and Dogauchi M, Explanatory Report on the 2005 Hague Choice of Court Agreements Convention (2013).
Hess B and Mantovani M, in F Ferrari/ P Fernández Arroyo (eds.), Private International Law – Contemporary Challenges and Continuing Relevance (2019), 293 ff.
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immunités de juridiction et le Règlement Bruxelles I’ (2014) Revue de droit commercial
53.
Lowenfeld A.F, International Litigation and the Quest for Reasonableness, General Course on Private International Law, (Collected Courses of the Hague Academy of International Law 82 1994) 245.
Mann F.A, The Doctrine of Jurisdiction in International Law (Collected Courses of the Hague Academy of International Law 1 1964) 111.
Mann F.A, The Doctrine of International Jurisdiction Revisited after Twenty Years (Collected Courses of the Hague Academy of International Law 9 1984) 186.
Mayer P, ‘Droit international privé et droit international public sous l’angle de la notion de compétence’(1979) Revue critique de droit international privé 1.
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Pavoni R, ‘The Myth of the Customary Nature of the United Nations Convention on the State Immunity: Does the End Justify the Means ?’, in A van Aaken and I Motoc (eds), The European Convention on Human Rights and General International Law (OUP 2018) 282.
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Gilles Cuniberti
[1] See pt III
[2] On the claim that international law constrains jurisdiction to adjudicate, see 1.1.1.
[3] It has been argued that a global theory of international jurisdiction could nevertheless be designed as a theory of horizontal regulation of international jurisdiction whereby States would exercise self-restrain by subjecting themselves to a requirement of reasonableness: L Usunier, La régulation de la competence juridictionnelle en droit international privé (Litec 2008) and the English summary in L Usunier, Regulating the Jurisdiction of Courts in Int’l Litigation: Towards a Global Answer in Civil and Commercial Matters, 9 Yearbook Pr. Int’l L. 2007 541. As recognized by the author, her theory is difficult to reconcile with the widespread existence of exorbitant rules of jurisdiction which do not reveal any form of restraint, and with the absence of any rule of customary international law constraining adjudicatory jurisdiction: see 1.1.1.
[4] D Fernandez Arroyo, Compétence exclusive et compétence exorbitante dans les relations privées internationales (Collected Courses of the Hague Academy of International Law 323 2006) 23, 37.
[5] See Part 14, Chapter 8.
[6] M Weller, Mutual Trust: A Suitable Foundation for Private International Law in Regional Integration Communities and Beyond? (Collected Courses of the Hague Academy of International Law 49, 2022) 423 showing, in particular, the limitations in this respect of the ASEAN and of MERCOSUL (para 332: ‘the conceptual attitude of the MERCOSUR instruments for judicial cooperation technically focused on a full preservation of national sovereignty’).
[7] Iceland, Norway and Switzerland have concluded with the EU the Lugano Convention on jurisdiction and the enforcement of judgments in civil and commercial matters 1988, which mirrors the Brussels Ibis Regulation (see next n 8). The European Commission considers that it is an instrument closely related to the political project of the EU, and that, on this ground, it can only be ratified by States participating in this project. As a result, England was denied the right to accede after Brexit.
[8] The European Union has adopted uniform rules of jurisdiction through a number of EU Regulations applicable in different fields of the law: civil and commercial matters (Regulation of the European Parliament and of the Council on jurisdiction and the recognition and enforcement of judgments in civil and commercial matters (recast), 1215/2012 of 12 December 2012 (EU), hereafter ‘Brussels Ibis Regulation’), matrimonial matters and parental responsibility (Council Regulation on jurisdiction, the recognition and enforcement of decisions in matrimonial matters and the matters of parental responsibility, and on international child abduction (recast), 2019/1111 of 25 June 2019 (EU), hereafter ‘Brussels IIter Regulation’), succession (Regulation of the European Parliament and of the Council of on jurisdiction, applicable law, recognition and enforcement of decisions and acceptance and enforcement of authentic instruments in matters of succession and on the creation of a European Certificate of Succession, hereafter ‘Succession Regulation’, 650/2012 of 4 July 2012 (EU)), etc.
[9] See Preamble to Brussels Ibis Regulation, Recital 26; Eric Gasser Gmbh v MISAT srl, Case C116/02 (CJEU), Judgment 9 December 2003 [ECLI:EU:C:2003:657]: ‘the Brussels Convention is necessarily based on the trust which the Contracting States accord to each other’s legal systems and judicial institutions. It is that mutual trust which has enabled a compulsory system of jurisdiction to be established, which all the courts within the purview of the Convention are required to respect’.
[10] H Muir Watt and D Bureau, Droit international privé (5th ed 2021) para 123.
[11] See however R Michaels, ‘Two Paradigms of Jurisdiction’ (2006) 27 Michigan Journal of International Law 1003, 1003-1039, presenting the Brussels Regulation as representative of European law, and characterizing it as horizontal, multilateral and international.
[12] R Michaels, V° Jurisdiction, Foundations Encyclopedia of Private International Law (Elgar 2017) 1042.
[13] An important consequence should be that rules determining the power of courts to decide disputes such as rules defining the scope of immunity from jurisdiction of States should have no influence on rules allocating jurisdiction over private disputes between the courts of different States such as the Brussels I Regulation: see N Joubert, ‘Chroniques d’un malentendu: les relations entre les immunités de juridiction et le Règlement Bruxelles I’ (2014) Revue de droit commercial 53. The distinction, however, was not clearly perceived by the CJEU: see LG v Rina, Case C-641/18 (CJEU), Judgement 7 May 2020 [ECLI: ECLI:EU:C:2020:349], para 53.
[14] There are few of them. The most important formulating agency in the field of private international, the Hague Conference on Private International Law (HCCH), has essentially sponsored international conventions on choice of law. The work of the HCCH on the adoption of a convention harmonizing rules of international jurisdiction has failed (A Philip, ‘The Global Hague Judgments Convention: Some Comments’ and D Bennett, ‘The Hague Convention on Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Judgments – A failure of characterization’, in T Einhorn and K Siehr (ed), Intercontinental Cooperation Through Private International Law: Essays in Memory of Peter E. Nygh (T.M.C. Asser Press, The Hague 2004) ; C Carmody, Y Iwasawa and S Rhodes (ed), Trilateral Perspectives on International Legal Issues: Conflict and Coherence (ASIL Baltimore 2003); J.J Barceló III and K.M Clermont, A Global Law of Jurisdiction and Judgments: Lessons from The Hague (Kluwer Law International, The Hague, London, New York 2002). It however led to the only important exception, the adoption of the Hague Convention on Choice of Court Agreement 2005. On the Lugano Convention, see n 7.
[15] The most prominent example is the European Union which has adopted uniform rules of jurisdiction through a number of EU Regulations applicable in different fields of the law: see text accompanying n 8.
[16] France v Turkey, Case No 9 (PCIJ), Judgment 7 September 1927, (ser. A) No. 10, ICGJ 248.
[17] P Mayer, ‘Droit international privé et droit international public sous l’angle de la notion de compétence’ (1979) Revue critique de droit international privé 1 ; H Muir Watt and D Bureau (n 10) 61.
[18] Restatement (Fourth) of Foreign Relations Law 2018, Introductory note to § 431.
[19] Restatement (Fourth) of Foreign Relations Law 2018, § 431, note 2.
[20] F A Mann, The Doctrine of Jurisdiction in International Law (Collected Courses of the Hague Academy of International Law 1 1964) 111 ; The Doctrine of International Jurisdiction Revisited after Twenty Years (Collected Courses of the Hague Academy of International Law 9 1984) 186; A F Lowenfeld, International Litigation and the Quest for Reasonableness, General Course on Private International Law, ( Collected Courses of the Hague Academy of International Law 82 1994) 245.
[21] Société Eram Shipping Company Limited (Respondents) and others v Hong Kong and Shanghai Banking Corporation Limited (Appellants) (House of Lords, United Kingdom) [2003] UKHL 30, Judgment 30 of 12 June 2003.
[22] M Szpunar, ‘Territoriality of Union Law in the era of globalisation’, in D Petrlík, M Bobek, JM Passer, A Masson (ed), Evolution des rapports entre les ordres juridiques de l'Union européenne, international et nationaux - Liber Amicorum Jiří Malenovský (Bruylant 2020) 149 ff.
[23] Cf 3.6.
[24] M Akehurst, ‘Jurisdiction in International Law’ (1972-73) 46 British Yearbook of International Law 145, 176; D.E Childress III, ‘V° Jurisdiction, Limits under International Law’, Encyclopedia of Private International Law (Elgar 2017) 1055. In particular, it is noteworthy that the European Union has excluded the use of such exorbitant rules within the scope of EU Regulations, but validated them in relations with third states: Van Uden Maritime BV v Kommanditgesellschaft in Firma Deco-Line, Case C-391/95 (CJEU), Judgment 17 November 1988 [ECLI:EU:C:1998:543].
[25] Germany v Italy; Greece intervening, Jurisdictional Immunities of the State, Judgment 3 February 2012, [Reports 2012] 99, para 57.
[26] In Europe, 7 States have ratified the European Convention on State Immunity 1972.
[27] R Garnett, ‘Should the Sovereign Immunity Be Abolished?’ (1999) 20 Australian Yearbook of International Law 175 ; A Orakhelashvili, ‘Jurisdictional Immunity of States and General International Law – Explaining the Jus Gestionis v Jus Imperii Divide’ in T Ruys, N Angelet and L Ferro (ed), The Cambridge Handbook of Immunities and International Law (Cambridge 2019) 122.
[28] See, in the US, Siderman de Blake and others v Argentina and others, No 85-5773 (US Court of Appeals, US) [965 F.2d 699 (9th Cir. 1992)] Judgment of 22 May 1992, in the UK Al- Adsani v Government of Kuwait, (Court of Appeal, England and Wales), Judgment of 29 March 1996, [1996] 2 LRC 344 and in Canada: Kazemi Estate v Islamic Republic of Iran, (Supreme Court, Canada) Case 35034, Judgment of 10 October 2014, [2014 SCC 62].
[29] R Garnett (n 27) 175.
[30] See Preamble of the UN Convention on Jurisdictional Immunities of States and Their Property 2004.
[31] Germany v Italy; Greece intervening (n 25), para 117, on Art 19 of the UN Convention.
[32] Benkharbouche v Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs, Case 2015/0063 (Supreme Court, UK), Judgment 18 October 2017 [2017] UKSC 62, para 32.
[33] R Pavoni, ‘The Myth of the Customary Nature of the United Nations Convention on the State Immunity: Does the End Justify the Means?’, in A van Aaken and I Motoc (ed), The European Convention on Human Rights and General International Law (OUP 2018) 282.
[34] Cudak v Lithuania, Case 15869/02, (ECtHR) Judgment 23 March 2010, para 66; Sabeh El Leil v France, Case 34869/05, (ECtHR) Judgement 29 June 2011, para 54; Radunović v Montenegro, Case 45197/13, (ECtHR) Judgment 25 October 2016, para 69.
[35] Oleynikov v Russia, Case 36703/04, (ECtHR) Judgment 14 March 2012, [Art 12: territorial tort exception] para 66.
[36] Cudak v Lithuania ; Sabeh El Leil v France ; Radunović v Montenegro (n 34).
[37] See e.g. ICE, Case 18-24.643 (Court of Cassation, France), Judgment of 1 July 2020 and Ambassade du Ghana, Case 18-13.790 (Court of cassation, France), Judgment of 27 November 2019, États-Unis d’Amérique c. P.VN, Case S.15.0051.N (Court of Cassation, Belgium), Judgment of 4 March 2019 (2020) Journal des Tribunaux 595.
[38] A Mahamdia v People’s Democratic Republic of Algeria, Case C-154/11 (CJEU), Judgment of 19 July 2012 [ECLI: ECLI:EU:C:2012:309], Opinion of A.G. M. P Mengozzi] para 26 ; LG v Rina, Case C-641/18 (CJEU), Judgment of 7 May 2020 [ECLI:EU:C:2020:3], Opinion of A.G. M Szpunar) para 38.
[39] Benkharbouche v Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs, (n 32).
[40] Benkharbouche and Janah v UK, Case 19059/18 and 19725/18 (ECtHR), Judgment of 5 April 2022.
[41] See US Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act 1976 (28 USC. 1605), UK State Immunity Act 1978, s 3.
[42] In France, see Administration des chemins de fer du gouvernement iranien c/ Sté Levant Express Transport, Case 67-10.243 (Court of cassation, France), Judgment 25 February 1969; Dame Soliman v École saoudienne de Paris et Royaume d'Arabie saoudite, Case 00-45.629 (Court of cassation, France), Judgment 20 June 2003.
[43] Playa Larga (Owners of Cargo Lately Laden on Board) v I Congreso del Partido (Owners), Case 1 AC 244 (House of Lords, UK), Judgment of 16 July 1981 [1981] UKHL J0716-2; Claim against the Empire of Iran Case, Case 45 ILR 57 (Constitutional Court, Germany), Judgment 30 April 1963.
[44] Dame Soliman v École saoudienne de Paris et Royaume d'Arabie saoudite (n 42).
[45] This is the case under the US Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act: the general provision on commercial transactions applies: Saudi Arabia v Nelson, No 91-522 (Supreme Court, US) [507 US 349 (1993)] Judgment of 1993, 360. The CJEU has also applied its general criterion to determine whether an embassy was immune from suit by an employee: see A Mahamdia v People’s Democratic Republic of Algeria, Case C-154/11 (CJEU), Judgment 19 July 2012 [ECLI: ECLI:EU:C:2012:309].
[46] Under the law of certain States, and under certain international instruments, foreign States are immune if the employee was one of their nationals or was not a national of the forum: see UK State Immunity Act 1978, s 4(2); European Convention on State Immunity 1972, Art 5(2). The nationality of the employee is irrelevant under the law of many other States, such as the US: El-Hadad v United Arab Emirates, No 99-7220 (District of Columbia Circuit Court, US) [216 F.3d 29 (D.C. Cir. 2000)] Judgment of 16 June 2000.
[47] Under the law of certain States, the employment of members of a diplomatic mission, irrespective of their functions, is covered by State immunity: UK State Immunity Act 1978, 16(1)(a). See also, in Ireland: Government of Canada v Employment Appeals Tribunal and Burke, Case 95 ILR 467, Judgment 12 March 1992 500. The same rule is found in the 2004 U.N. Convention, Art 11(2)(b).
[48] International Shoe Co. v Washington, No 107 (Supreme Court, US) [326 US 310 (1945)] Judgment 3 December 1945.
[49] Asahi Metal Industry Co. v Superior Court of Cal., Solano Cty, No 85-693 (Supreme Court, US) [480 US 102 (1987)] Judgment 24 February 1987.
[50] Shaffer v Heitner, No 75-1812 (Supreme Court, US) [ 433 US 186 (1977)] Judgment 24 June 1977.
[51] Burnham v Superior Court of California, County of Marin, No 89-44 (Supreme Court, US) [495 US 604 (1990)] Judgment 29 May 1990.
[52] Code of Civil Procedure (GCCP) 1887 (Germany) s 23.
[53] Case XI ZR 206/90 (BGH, Germany), Judgment 2 July 1991.
[54] Civil Code 1804 (France), Art 14.
[55] Case no 11-40101 (Cour de cassation, France), Judgment 29 February 2012. In Luxembourg, courts held that the same provision did not violate the principle of equal treatment: cf Case no 36358, (Cour of Appeal, Luxembourg), Judgment 6 November 2013 (2014) Journal des tribunaux Luxembourg 81, with obs. P. Kinsch.
[56] Case 61/2000 (Tribunal Constitucional, Spain), Judgment 13 March 2000.
[57] Naït-Liman v Switzerland, Case 51357/07 (ECtHR) GC, Judgment 15 March 2018, B Hess and M Mantovani, in F Ferrari/ P Fernández Arroyo (ed), Private International Law – Contemporary Challenges and Continuing Relevance (2019), 293 ff.
[58] R Michaels has also argued that there are two paradigms for conceiving international jurisdiction, but different ones: see Michaels, (n 11) and (n 12).
[59] Cf 4.3.
[60] R Brand, ‘Access to Justice Analysis on a Due Process Platform’ (2012) Columbia Law Review Sidebar 112 76, 80.
[61] Strictly speaking, doctrines granting discretion to common law courts to stay proceedings on the ground that they are not the most appropriate forum (forum non conveniens) are not concerned with granting jurisdiction to the court, but rather with the exercise of jurisdiction.
[62] See, declining to take into account public law interests, Lubbe v Cape Plc, Case 1 W.L.R. 1545 (House of Lords, UK) Judgment 20 July 2000 [2000] UKHL J0720-4.
[63] Spiliada Maritime Corpn v Cansulex Ltd, Case AC 460 (House of Lords, UK) Judgment 19 November 1986.
[64] Piper Aircraft Co. v Reyno, No 8048 (Supreme Court, US) [454 US 235 (1981)] Judgment 8 December 1981, 257.
[65] For a critique of the doctrine in the United States, see M Gardner, ‘Retiring Forum Non Conveniens’ (2017) 92 New York University Law Review, 390.
[66] R Brand, (n 60) and (n 80).
[67] One exception is the discretion granted by the rules on parallel litigation to courts to take into account the fact that a foreign court was seized first. This discretion is found in the rules on lis pendens with third States provided by the Brussels Ibis Regulation: cf G van Calster, ‘Lis Pendens and third states: the origin, DNA and early case-law on Articles 33 and 34 of the Brussels Ia Regulation and its “forum non conveniens-light” rules’ (2023) 19 Journal of Private International Law, 363.
[68] Scheffel, Case Bull. Civ I, no 452 (Cour de cassation, France), Judgment 30 October 1962.
[69] R Michaels, (n 12) para 1041.
[70] Although rules of domestic jurisdiction typically allocate jurisdiction between the courts of the relevant state, it was immediately perceived that they could have the same purpose if used in an international context. Despite being inspired from domestic rules, rules of international jurisdiction were designed to operate unilaterally, by solely defining the jurisdiction of the courts of the forum. Where the connecting factors of the forum would point to foreign countries, the forum would simply decline jurisdiction, but would not even suggest that a particular foreign court should retain the dispute.
[71] For a critique, cf P Mayer, V Heuzé and B Remy, Droit international privé (12th ed, LGDJ 2019) para 296.
[72] Code of Civil and Commercial Procedures (Egypt), Art 28 ff.
[73] Code of Civil Procedure 1996 (Japan), Art 3-2 ff. Cf K Takahashi, Japan’s New Act on International Jurisdiction (Smashwords 2011); K Takahashi, ‘The Jurisdiction of Japanese Courts in a Comparative Context’ (2015) 11 Journal of Private International Law 103.
[74] Swiss Federal Act of Private International Law of 18 December 1987.
[75] Code of Private International Law of 27 November 1998 (Tunisia).
[76] Venezuelan Act on Private International Law of 6 August 1998.
[77] Exceptions are rare. They include Japan and China, which have adopted innovative doctrines granting discretion to their courts in the application of their jurisdictional rules in international disputes. In Japan, cf Art 3-9 of the Code of Civil Procedure on ‘Dismissal of Action under Special Circumstances’, which allows Japanese courts to assess the overall fairness and efficiency of the taking of jurisdiction. In China, cf Art 532 of the Interpretation of the Supreme People’s Court on Applicability of the Civil Procedure Law of the People's Republic of China of 3 May 2015, which introduces a form of forum non conveniens. Cf also Dominican Republic Private International Law Act of 5 December 2014, Art 23.
[78] Cf Introduction to the present Chapter.
[79] For instance, arguing the justice was too slow in Italy: cf Eric Gasser Gmbh v MISAT srl, (n 9) and (n 143).
[80] Cf 4.3.6
[81] Article 14 and 15 of the French Civil Code were established at a time where French courts would decline jurisdiction over suits involving only non-nationals. They were thus the only grounds of jurisdiction at the time. They reveal that jurisdiction was once conceived in relational terms, as the consequence of the bond between the ruler and its subjects: A.T von Merhen, ‘Adjudicatory Jurisdiction: General Theories Compared and Evaluated’ (1983) 63 Boston University Law Review 279.
[82] Johnson v Taylor Brothers and Co Ltd., Case All E.R. Rep. Ext. 1210 (House of Lords, UK) Judgment 11 November 1919 [1918–1919].
[83] Practice Direction 6B Service Out of the Jurisdiction (UK), 8 June 2023.
[84] Spiliada Maritime Corpn v Cansulex Ltd, (n 63).
[85] AK Investment CJSC v Kyrgyz Mobil Tel Ltd & Ors (Isle of Man), Case JCPC 2009/0064 (Supreme Court, UK), Judgment 10 March 2011 [201]1 UKPC 7.
[86] Morguard Investments Ltd. c. De Savoye, Case 21116 (Supreme Court, Canada), Judgment 20 December 1990; Beals c. Saldanha, Case 2003 CSC 72 (Supreme Court, Canada), Judgment 18 December 2003: cf Part 14.
[87] This included the rule allowing service outside Ontario on a ‘necessary party’ and in relation to a claim for ‘damages suffered in Ontario’ for a tort wherever committed.
[88] Club Resorts Ltd. v Van Breda, Case 2012 SCC 17 (Supreme Court, Canada), Judgment 18 April 2012. It also maintained the two ‘traditional’ bases of presence of the defendant and consent.
[89] All provinces except Quebec continue to admit a court’s discretion to disregard a forum selection clause where there is ‘strong cause’ to do so, following the English approach.
[90] The CJPTA does not recognize jurisdiction based on the mere presence of the defendant, having instead adopted residence as the connecting factor.
[91] For eg, Quebec’s jurisdiction in contract cases is arguably broader given that it can be based on ‘injury suffered in Quebec’, which has benefited local plaintiffs.
[92] Cf 1.2.
[93] In principle, the international jurisdiction of courts in the United States, which is labelled ‘personal jurisdiction’, is a matter of state law (including for federal courts, which apply the rules of personal jurisdiction of the state in which they sit: FED R. CIVP. 1938 4(k)(1)), subject to the constitutional guarantee afforded by the US Constitution. Many states have adopted specific legislation to that effect (called ‘long arm statutes’), but they are typically vague and open-ended. As a result, the international jurisdiction of US courts is essentially defined by the constitutional guarantee: cf S Dodson, ‘Personal Jurisdiction in Comparative Context’ (2020) 68 The American Journal of Comparative Law, 701.
[94] Which were initially suggested by AT von Mehren and D Trautman, ‘Jurisdiction to Adjudicate: A Suggested Analysis’ (1966) Harvard Law Review 79, 1121, 1144–1163. Two additional categories are jurisdiction based on the consent of the defendant (whether by entering into an ex ante agreement - cf, 4.3.3- or by waiver or forfeiture) and jurisdiction based on service within the jurisdiction, that the US Supreme Court has insulated from the minimum contacts test (cf 1.2): Dodson, (n 91).
[95] Helicopteros Nacionales de Colombia, S.A. v Hall, No 82-1127 (Supreme Court, US) [466 US 408 (1984)] Judgment 24 April 1984, 414, (n 8).
[96] Helicopteros, para 414, (n 9); Goodyear Dunlop Tires Operations, S.A. v Brown, No 10-76 (Supreme Court, US) [564 US 915 (2011)] Judgment 27 June 2011, 919; International Shoe v Wash, (n 48).
[97] This was done in part in response to Omni Capital Int’l v Rudolf Wolff & Co., Ltd., No 86-740 (Supreme Court, US) [484 US 97 (1987)], Judgment 8 December 1987. A recent article, W S Dodge and S Dodson, ‘Personal Jurisdiction and Aliens’, (2018) 116 Michigan Law Review, 1205. considers the increasing prevalence of noncitizens in US civil litigation and how the alienage status of a defendant should affect personal jurisdiction. The authors propose a new theory of personal jurisdiction over aliens. Under this theory, alienage status broadens the geographic range for minimum contacts from a single state to the whole nation. This national-contacts test applies to personal jurisdiction over an alien defendant whether the cause of action arises under federal or state law and whether the case is heard in federal or state court. They argue the test would be consistent with the Constitution and consonant with the practical realities of modern transnational litigation.
[98] Piper Aircraft Co. v Reyno, (n 64) and (n 107) is forum non which is a discretionary issue; Helicopteros Nacionales de Colom. v Hall, (n 95) had no emphasis on the foreign defendant. Of course, the fountainhead of much of the doctrine of comity and of recognition of foreign judgments came a century before in Hilton v Guyot, No 130, 34 (Supreme Court, US) [159 US 113 (1895)], Judgment 3 June 1895.
[99] Asahi Metal Indus. Co. v Superior Court of Cal. (n 49).
[100] Asahi had a unanimous decision to find that California could not exercise jurisdiction over the Asahi company but a plurality opinion and a split among two groups of Justices as to why. Four justices found that there were insufficient minimum contacts with the forum, but eight Justices found assertion of jurisdiction would be unfair.
[101] J. McIntyre Mach., Ltd. V Nicastro, No 09-1343 (Supreme Court, US) [564 US 873 (2011)], Judgment 27 June 2011; Daimler AG v Bauman, No 11-965 (Supreme Court, US) [571 US 117 (2014)], 14 January 2014).
[102] Goodyear Dunlop Tires Operations, S.A. v Brown, (n 96).
[103] L J Silberman and N D Yaffe, ‘The Transnational Case in Conflict of Laws: Two Suggestions for the New Restatement Third of Conflict of Laws—Judicial Jurisdiction Over Foreign Defendants and Party Autonomy in International Contracts’ (2017) Duke Journal of Comparative and International Law 27, L. 405. This article discusses the due process standard for specific jurisdiction vis a vis foreign versus domestic defendants. The authors discovered a split within cases with foreign defendants--finding that tort cases, like personal injury claims against foreign manufacturers, were not generally dismissed on reasonableness grounds--yet other cases, like for breach of contract or fraud, often were. These cases were dismissed, according to the authors, primarily based on comity concerns, determined by Asahi to be part of the reasonableness prong of the personal jurisdiction analysis. These types of concerns apply only to foreign defendants, not to domestic defendants. The authors discuss a variety of factors considered in the reasonableness analysis unique to foreign defendants, such as whether the defendant can obtain local counsel, the hardship on US plaintiffs if the case is dismissed, etc.
[104] Silberman and N D Yaffe (n 103) 407.
[105] The doctrine of forum non conveniens can be applied differently in federal and state courts: cf W S Dodge, M Gardner and C Whytock., ‘The Many State Doctrines of Forum Non Conveniens’ (2023) 72 Duke Law Journal 1163-1256.
[106] Cf 2.
[107] Piper Aircraft Co. v Reyno (n 64) (n 98).
[108] L Usunier, (n 3)
[109] See, eg, Brussels Ibis Regulation, Art 45.
[110] Brussels Ibis Regulation, Art 24(1); British South Africa Co v Companhia de Mocambique, Case A.C. 602 (House of Lords, UK), Judgment 8 September 1893; Shaffer v Heitner, (n 50); Tunisian Code of Private International Law, Art 8.
[111] It is not in Japan, where it does not appear on the list of exclusive heads of jurisdiction of Art 3-5 of the Japanese Code of Civil Procedure.
[112] Brussels Ibis Regulation, Art 24(2) and (3); Japanese Code of Civil Procedure, Art 3-5
[113] Cf eg, Civil Code 1991 (Quebec), Art 3151 (tort action for damage caused by exposure to or use of raw materials originating in Québec).
[114] The issue is the enforcement of choice of court clauses provided in contracts involving weaker parties is specific and addressed below 3.3.
[115] Cf 3.5.
[116] Brussels Ibis Regulation, Art 25; 2007 Lugano Convention, Art 23.
[117] Monster Cable Products Inc v Audio Marketing Services, Case no 07-15.823 (Cour de cassation, France), Judgment 22 October 2008.
[118] M/S Bremen v Zapata Off-Shore Co., No. 71-322 (Supreme Court, US) [407 US 1 (1972)], Judgment 12 June 1972, distinguishing Bisso v Inland Waterways Corp., No 50 (Supreme Court, US) [349 US 85 (1955)], Judgment 16 May 1955.
[119] Case no VII ZR 25/12 (BGH, Germany), Judgment 5 September 2012.
[120] Hague Convention on Choice of Court Agreements, Art 6(c).
[121] T Hartley and M Dogauchi, Explanatory Report on the 2005 Hague Choice of Court Agreements Convention (2013) para 153.
[122] Cf eg, Preamble to the Brussels Ibis Regulation, Recital 16.
[123] Supra, 2.
[124] Brussels Ibis Regulation, Art 7(1); Japanese Code of civil procedure, Art 3-3(i); Tunisian Code of Private International Law, Art 5.
[125] Brussels Ibis Regulation, Art 7(2); Tunisian Code of Private International Law, Art 5. The jurisdiction of the court of the place of damage is often only admitted reluctantly, under certain qualifications: see, e.g., Japanese Code of civil procedure, Art 3-3(viii): damage suffered in the forum should be foreseeable.
[126] Japanese Code of civil procedure, Art 3-3(iii).
[127] Succession Regulation, Art 4; Japanese Code of civil procedure, Art 3-3(xii).
[128] Council Regulation implementing enhanced cooperation in the area of jurisdiction, applicable law and the recognition and enforcement of decisions in matters of matrimonial property regimes, 2016/1103 of 24 June 2016 (EU), Art 6.
[129] Brussels IIter Regulation, Art 7. Tunisian Code of Private International Law, Art 6.
[130] In the civil law tradition, the domicile of the defendant is the default jurisdictional rule (see eg Brussels Ibis Regulation, Art 4; Japanese Code of civil procedure, Art 3-2; Tunisian Code of Private International Law, Art 3). In the USA, it grants general jurisdiction under the Due Process jurisprudence of the US Supreme Court: cf International Shoe Co. v Washington, (n 48) and (n 96).
[131] Cf 3.4.
[132] Cf 1.1.
[133] Cf, eg, Art 48 of the French Code of Civil Procedure.
[134] Japanese Code of Civil Procedure, Art 3-7(2); Chinese Law of Civil Procedure, Art 34.
[135] Japanese Code of Civil Procedure, Art 3-7(3); Brussels Ibis Regulation, Art 25(2); 2005 Hague Convention, Art 3(c)(ii).
[136] Brussels Ibis Regulation, Art 25(1)(a); 2007 Lugano Regulation, Art 23(1)(a); 2005 Hague Convention, Art 3(c)(i).
[137] Brussels Ibis Regulation, Art 25(1)(b) & (c); 2007 Lugano Regulation, Art 23(1)(b) & (c).
[138] One first view is that the law governing substantive validity of choice of court agreements should apply, which would often point to the law of the chosen court (Brussels Ibis Regulation, Art 25(1); 2005 Hague Convention, Art 6(a)). In the US, the traditional view is that the law of the forum applies: cf Fendi S.R.L v Condotti Shops, Inc., No. 3D99-2258 (District Court of Appeal of Florida, Third District) [754 So. 2d 755 (Fla. Dist. Ct. App. 2000)], Judgment 8 March 2000.
[139]Saey Home & Garden NV/SA v Lusavouga-Máquinas e Acessórios Industriais SA, Case C-64/17 (CJEU), Judgment 8 March 2019 [ECLI: ECLI:EU:C:2018:173] para 25. The consequence of this line of authorities is that the CJEU considers that the issue of the existence of consent should be defined at European level: for instance, choice of court agreements should only be considered as accepted where the text of the contract signed by both parties itself contains an express reference to general conditions which include a jurisdiction clause (Hőszig Kft. v Alstom Power Thermal Services, Case C-222/15 (CJEU), Judgment 7 July 2016 [ECLI:EU:C:2016:525] para 39).
[140] Cf 3.3.
[141] Cf 3.1.
[142] Brussels Ibis Regulation, Art 25(5); 2005 Hague Convention, Art 3(d).
[143] This was the case in the European Union until 2012, as the CJEU had ruled that the lis pendens doctrine applied in presence of choice of court agreements and thus prevented the chosen court from deciding the dispute as long as the court seized first would not have declined jurisdiction: Gasser Gmbh v MISAT srl, (n 9) and (n 79).
[144] Brussels Ibis Regulation, Art 31(2).
[145] In the UK, cf Star Reefers Pool Inc. v JFC Group Co. Ltd, Case [2012] EWCA Civ 14 (Court of Appeal, England and Wales) Judgment 20 January 2012. Other sanctions such as granting damages for breach of the jurisdiction clause are conceivable: cf A Briggs, Agreements on Jurisdiction and Choice of Law (Oxford University Press 2008); K Takahashi, ‘Damages for Breach of a Choice-of-Court Agreement’ (2008) Yearbook Private International Law, 57.
[146] This is the case in the US: see Carnival Cruise Lines, Inc. v Shute, No. 89-1647 (Supreme Court, US) [499 US 585 (1991)] Judgment 17 April 1991.
[147] Brussels Ibis Regulation, Art 15, 19, and 23; Japanese Code of civil procedure, Art 3-7. The jurisprudence of US courts is less rigid. It does not protect certain categories of parties per se, but it assesses whether the designated court is ‘suitable,’ ‘available,’ and able to ‘accomplish substantial justice.’ M/S The Bremen v Zapata Off–Shore Co (n 118) and and Dodson (n 92).
[148] Brussels Ibis Regulation, Art 18.
[149] H Batiffol, ‘Observations sur les liens de la compétence judiciaire et de la compétence législative’, (1962) 9 Netherlands International Law Review, Special Issue: De Conflictu Legum, Essays Presented to RD Kollewijn and J Offerhaus, 55.
[150] Cf 3.1.
[151] Cf 2. Under the US doctrine of forum non conveniens, the applicability of foreign law is also a public factor in favour of dismissing the action, as the foreign court might take the opportunity of the case to develop the law: cf, eg,, the call of the US court for India to develop its environmental law in the Bhopal case: In Re Union Carbide Corp. Gas Plant Disaster, No 21-38 (Supreme Court, US) [634 F. Supp. 842 (1986)] Judgment 10 June 1986.
[152] Cf, eg, Recital 27 of the Preamble to the EU Succession Regulation (‘The rules of this Regulation are devised so as to ensure that the authority dealing with the succession will, in most situations, be applying its own law.’); 1998 Venezuelan Act of Private International Law, Art 41 and 42.
[153] S Corneloup, ‘Les liens entre forum et ius: réflexion sur quelques tendances en droit international privé contemporain’, Mélanges en l’honneur de B. Ancel (Ipralex 2017) 461.
[154] For instance, the protection of weaker parties by ensuring both the jurisdiction of the courts and the application of the law of the most favourable jurisdiction (eg, the country of the residence of consumers in the EU: cf Regulation (EC) No 593/2008 (Rome I), Art 6(1); Brussels Ibis Regulation, Art 18).
[155] Cf 2.2.1.
[156] Practice Direction 6B Service Out of the Jurisdiction, Ground 6(c).
[157] G Cuniberti, ‘The International Market for Contracts – The Most Attractive Contract Laws’ (2014) 34 Northwestern Journal of International Law & Business 455.
[158] Under the so-called open court theory: cf Lord Denning in The Atlantic Star, Case Q.B. 364, 382 (Court of Appeal, England and Wales), Judgment 27 July 1972 [1973] UKHL J0410-1: ‘You may call this ‘forum-shopping’ if you please, but if the forum is England, it is a good place to shop in, both for the quality of the goods and the speed of service.’
[159] Some of these rules were outlawed and rewritten on the ground that they did not comport with fundamental rights: cf 1.2.
[160] Cf, eg, Art 14 and 15 of the French and Luxembourg Civil Code 1803.
[161] Cf, eg, Case no 02-17974 (Court of Cassation, France), Judgment 30 March 2004, ruling in a divorce case between an American husband and a Franco-American wife: ‘absent a treaty of judicial cooperation between the United States and France in civil matters, the favour benefiting [the wife] arising under the exclusive jurisdictional rule of Art 15 [of the Civil Code, ie, nationality based jurisdiction] was not more exorbitant than the one arising under the rule of Florida law granting jurisdiction on the ground of temporary presence of the plaintiff in that State’.
[162] French senior judges have publicly said that the reason the Court of cassation would dismiss challenges to nationality-based jurisdiction was that their existence was essential in the negotiation of bilateral treaties of judicial cooperation.
[163] One of the most significant achievements of the European law of jurisdiction was to exclude the application of exorbitant heads of jurisdiction in the mutual relationships between the Member States, while retaining them in their relationships with third States.